The aim of this paper is to decline the relationship between man, nature and resources in the Latin territory between the 6th century B.C. and the threshold of the Early Middle Ages on the basis of a system of data that has never before been considered systematically nor as a coherent dossier. Max Weber had already suggested a method for proceeding in this direction: to develop « an analysis of Roman agrarian structures capable of grasping the existing connections, on the one hand, between the legal institutions, public and private, and the form of spatial planning elaborated by the gromatics, and, on the other hand, between these realities and the economic systems contemporary with them ».
Obiettivo di questo lavoro è declinare la relazione tra uomo, natura e risorse nel territorio latino tra il VI secolo a.C. e le soglie dell’Alto Medioevo sulla base di un sistema di dati mai considerati fino ad oggi in maniera sistematica né come dossier coerente. Già Max Weber aveva suggerito un metodo per procedere in questa direzione: sviluppare « un’analisi delle strutture agrarie romane capace di cogliere le connessioni esistenti, da una parte fra le istituzioni giuridiche, pubbliche e private, e la forma di assetto del territorio elaborata dai gromatici, dall’altra fra codeste realtà e le forme economiche ad esse contemporanee ».
Sfruttamento del territorio e paesaggi agrari nel Lazio di età romana / Carafa, P.; De Paolis, P.. - (2025), pp. 36-60. ( Ῥυθμός – Uomo natura risorse Cassino, Italia ) [10.13134/979-12-5977-494-1].
Sfruttamento del territorio e paesaggi agrari nel Lazio di età romana.
P. Carafa;P. De Paolis
2025
Abstract
The aim of this paper is to decline the relationship between man, nature and resources in the Latin territory between the 6th century B.C. and the threshold of the Early Middle Ages on the basis of a system of data that has never before been considered systematically nor as a coherent dossier. Max Weber had already suggested a method for proceeding in this direction: to develop « an analysis of Roman agrarian structures capable of grasping the existing connections, on the one hand, between the legal institutions, public and private, and the form of spatial planning elaborated by the gromatics, and, on the other hand, between these realities and the economic systems contemporary with them ».I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


